Zusi named MLS Breakout Player of the Year

Anyone who says they saw Graham Zusi’s breakout season coming in 2011 is either a liar or their last name is almost certainly Zusi or Vermes.

Not that Zusi’s previous MLS anonymity matters much now.

Sporting Kansas City’s dynamic, box-to-box midfielder with a Sampson-like mane of curly hair and blistering shot from distance simply played his way into the collective consciousness of MLS fans, players and pundits in 2011.

Befitting such a meteoric rise, Zusi ran away with MLSsoccer.com’s Breakout MLS Player of 2011 award, capping off a year in which he scored five goals and added seven assists in his first shot as a regular starter for manager Peter Vermes.

Looking back, it was all part of the plan, except Zusi and Vermes were the only ones in on it until Kansas City’s season started gaining steam and the highlight-reel strikes began rolling in.

“After last year, I looked at where I was and, to be honest, I wasn’t satisfied whatsoever,” Zusi told MLSsoccer.com in August. “I’m not satisfied being a substitute player in this league. My goal was to become a starter and make a name for myself.”

In a matter of nine short months, Zusi went from a relative unknown – a reserve midfielder with a boatload of college plaudits but little recognition as a professional – to a player with one of the most feared long-range strikes in the league. And suddenly, he’s even a dark horse to make Jurgen Klinnsman’s US national team camp in January.

After two nondescript seasons spent honing his craft in training (1,064 minutes played plus one goal and one assist in nine total starts), Zusi found himself in Vermes’ starting lineup 25 times in 2011, played 2,329 minutes and kept Jéferson – SKC’s Designated Player who since has been deemed surplus to requirements – on the bench.

And even if the 25-year-old Maryland product doesn’t happen to parlay his breakout season into a US call-up, Zusi has plenty to be proud of heading into a 2012 season in which he will be a keg cog for a youthful Sporting side on the rise.